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Journal Article

Citation

Seguin M, Lesage A, Chawky N, Guy A, Daigle F, Girard G, Turecki G. Can. J. Psychiatry 2006; 51(9): 581-586.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, Universite du Quebec en Outaouais, Gatineau. monique.seguin@uqo.ca

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, Canadian Psychiatric Association, Publisher SAGE Publications)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

17007225

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate all suicide cases that occurred in New Brunswick in the 14 months spanning April 1, 2002, to May 31, 2003, to determine 6-month and lifetime prevalence rates of psychopathology in the deceased. METHOD: We used 2 psychological autopsy methods: direct proxy-based interviews and medical chart reviews, together with telephone contacts with informants. Consensus DSM-IV diagnoses were formulated by clinical panels on the basis of the Structured Clinical Interviews I and II for DSM-IV complemented by medical charts. RESULTS: Of the 109 suicide deaths identified by the coroner at the time of the study, we were able to investigate 102. At time of death, 65% of the suicide victims had a mood disorder, 59% had a substance-related disorder, and 42% had concurrent mood and substance-related disorders. The lifetime prevalence of substance-related disorders among these suicide victims was 66%. Finally, 52% of the suicide victims presented with a personality disorder; one-half of these were of the cluster B type. CONCLUSIONS: Although treatment of depression has frequently been recognized as the focal point of clinically based suicide-prevention efforts, our results underscore substance-related disorders as a key dimension of completed suicide. Suicide-prevention programs should be designed to address this problem more directly.


Language: en

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